The Berger Collection is an important private collection of British art. Begun in 1996 by the late William M. B. Berger and his wife Bernadette Johnson Berger, it is now owned by the Berger Collection Educational Trust. Augmented by important new acquisitions, the collection comprises approximately two hundred objects and spans more than six centuries — from a rare medieval altarpiece dated about 1395 to a 1996–97 painting by Sir Howard Hodgkin.

The paintings, drawings, and art objects in the Berger Collection present a history of the British School from its origins among anonymous Norman artists to the achievements of painters working in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. A particular strength are its medieval and Renaissance artworks, including the Bute Book of Hours and portraits by Hans Eworth and Robert Peake. Other celebrated artists represented in the collection are Sir Peter Lely, Thomas Gainsborough, George Stubbs, Angelica Kauffman, Benjamin West, John Constable, David Roberts, Edward Lear, Sir Alfred J. Munnings, and David Hockney.

The Berger Collection is housed at the Denver Art Museum, where a selection of artworks is on display on a rotating basis.